"Neither man nor woman can be worth anything until they have
discovered that they are fools. This is the first step toward becoming
either estimable or agreeable; and until it is taken there is no hope."

Melbourne

"The family of Fools is ancient."

-Ben Franklin

"He's a Fool that cannot conceal his Wisdom."

-Ben Franklin

"One fool at least in every married couple."

-Henry Fielding (1707-54)

"Nobody ever did anything very foolish except from some strong
principle."

Viscount Melbourne

"The learned Fool writes his Nonsense in better Language than the
unlearned; but still 'tis Nonsense."

-Ben Franklin

"Fortunately for themselves and the world, nearly all men are
cowards and dare not act on what they believe. Nearly all our disasters come
of a few fools having the courage of their convictions."

Coventry Patmore

"The man who lives free from folly is not so wise as he
thinks."

La Rochefoucauld

"The cleverest of all, in my opinion, is
the man who calls himself a fool at least once a month."

-Feodor Dostoyevsky

A Writers Diary

"The Way of the Fool
is a sort of balancing act on a tightrope. While the Fool has no wish to
lose contact with his higher Self, he or she still wishes to gain
experience of life: The Fool is pulled first this way, and then the next.
Through such garnering of knowledge, he or she not only enriches the Ego,
but also satisfies the need of the Godhead (of which the Ego is part) to
explore the material plane. On the other hand, the Fool has no wish to
gain experience of superficial life. His or her aim is always to
pierce behind the surface, to penetrate the illusion of things, and to tap
the reality hidden behind the snaring web of illusion. The Fool knows that
the material plane, which so many people assume is the ultimate reality,
is the most illusory of all things-a maya or shadow play. We may
trace in this belief an underlying conflict of the one who has elected to
follow the Path of the Fool: he or she wishes to explore the material
world in the full knowledge that the material world is a minefield of
unrealities."

David Ovason

The Zelator

"According to Mark
Hedsel, the name ass, which is one of the names given to the body
in the Way of the Fool, is intended to recall the Feast of Fools. Mark
pointed out that, in the legends attached to the Christian Mysteries, the
ass had been redeemed because it carried Christ in triumph into Jerusalem.
As a sign of this redemption, Christ had left upon its shoulders a dark
cross. This is the esoteric parable on the idea that our physical body,
made from the Four Elements, is also the fourfold cross we must
bear."

David Ovason

The Zelator

"....There are two
kinds of Fools. The real Fool is the most sincere of mortal's: the Court
Fool and his kind-the trifling, jesting buffoon-but simulate the family
virtue, and steal the family name, for sordid purposes.

The life of
the Fool proper is full of the poetry of faith. He may run after a
will-o-the-wisp, while the Wise deride; but to him it is a veritable star
of hope. He differs from his fellow-mortals chiefly in this, that he sees
or believes what they do not, and consequently undertakes what they never
attempt. If he succeed in his endeavor, the world stops laughing, and
calls him a Genius: if he fail, it laughs the more, and derides his
undertaking as A Fool's Errand."

A Fools Errand..by one
of the Fools

Book: The Zelator..by
David Ovason...the Secret Journals of Mark Hedsel

"The Fool
is the one who looks through this material illusion- the mat sees
through matter, so to speak. This makes him one who is prepared to
suffer. Only a Fool would be prepared to suffer. I do not have in mind
merely that the Fool is prepared-or at least, should be prepared-to jump
into the unknown, into the great void, perhaps even into the mouth of a
waiting crocodile.'

David Ovason

The Zelator

"To what purpose, we
must ask, would anyone wish to follow the Way of the Fool? It is no easy
role to play. The Way of the Fool is so open to misunderstanding and
mockery. To the casual glance-which is the glance of most people-it does not
even appear to be a Way at all. At least, not in a Way in the ancient
meaning of a sacred Way, or an initiatory Way, like the the Isaac Ancient
Road of Hermes, or the Way of the Monk, with its hidden pomp of outer
clothes, pectoral crosses and other symbols, fronting its dour seriousness.
Yet there is such a Way, even if it is only one followed by men and women
striving to establish a Spiritual identity for themselves divested of outer
trappings

The Zelator

And if you choose the Way of
the Fool, do not fear appearing to be a Fool in the eyes of the world, for,
if you do not stray too far from the ancient road, in the eyes of God you
will always remain the beloved Fool.

The Zelator

"The most exquisite Folly is made of Wisdom
spun too fine."

-Ben Franklin

"He who despairs over an event is a coward,
but he who holds hope for the human condition is a fool."

-Albert Camus

"It is a profitable thing, if one is wise,
to seem foolish."

Aeschylus

"His soul will never starve for exploits or excitements who is wise
enough to be made a fool of. To be "taken in" everywhere is to see
the inside of everything."

G.K. Chesterton

"Many passenger stop to take their pleasure or make their profit in
(Vanity) Faire, instead of going onward to the Celestial City. Indeed, such
are the charms of the place that people often affirm it to be the true and
only heaven; stoutly contending that there is no other, that those who seek
further are mere dreamers, and that if the fabled brightness of the
Celestial City lay but a bare mile beyond the gates of Vanity, they would
not be fools enough to go thither."